Paint Schoodic

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Twisted

Among the missing: Vincent
van Gogh’s Vincent on his way to work / The painter on his way to Tarascon, Property of Kulturhistorisches Museum in
Magdeburg, Germany (formerly the Kaiser-Friedrich Museum). Missing from the
Stassfurt salt mines art repository near Magdeburg, Germany, on April 12, 1945.

When I was doing art festivals, I never worked very hard to secure
the inventory. Most other painters took the same approach. While jewelers and other
craftsmen sometimes had things stolen, paintings were immune. Most working
artists sell paintings to people who have an emotional response to their work,
and that’s something that would be blunted if the work in question were
acquired dishonestly. Artwork at this level hasn’t been commodified in the same
way that collectible masterworks are.

Among the missing: Emil
Nolde’s Red Poppies. Purchased for
Sl. Dr. Koch, documented on artist's list ("Purchaser List"). Lost at
Hamburg harbor (Überseehafen) in 1939. Painting appeared again in the 1980s and
went from a northern Germany collection into a North German Gallery (Kiel or
Hamburg?), and after not selling at auction was sold through the Austrian art
market (Salzburg) to an unknown purchaser.

That’s vastly different from one of the main moral dilemmas
facing our age: the problem of repatriating paintings stolen by the Nazis.
Today’s announcement
by Federal officials that an eighteenth century painting has been returned to
Poland was timed to coincide with the release of George Clooney’s The Monuments Men.

"If members of the American public question the
provenance of cultural objects from World War Two in their possession, they are
urged to call Homeland Security Investigations," said Nicole Navas, a
spokeswoman for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Right. The bald fact is that, sixty years after the fact,
most Nazi loot is returned only reluctantly.

Among the missing: Claude
Monet’s Manet painting in Monet's Garden,
Property of Martha and Max Liebermann Collection. Bought by Max Liebermann in
France in 1898; visible in a photo hanging in the salon of his Berlin apartment
at Pariser Platz, in 1932. It remained in the possession of Liebermann's widow
Martha until it was confiscated and sold in Berlin in 1943.

The Einsatzstab
Reichsleiter Rosenberg or ERR was dedicated to stealing cultural
property from subdued nations, Jews in particular. It managed to steal 20% of the
known art in Europe, operating in France, Belarus, Belgium,
Czechoslovakia, Greece, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Ukraine
and the Baltic states.

A vast amount of that was recovered immediately post-war;
however, there are still hundreds of thousands of items that have never been
returned to their rightful owners (or their descendants, since those owners are
mostly now dead).

Among the missing: Raphael’s
Portrait of a Young Man. Property of
The Czartoryski Museum in Krakow, Poland. Confiscated by Nazi officials in
September 1939 for Hitler's Führermuseum, Linz, Austria. Last seen in Dr. Hans
Frank's chalet in Neuhaus on Lake Schliersee, Germany, in January 1945.

Somewhere there is a rich collector who goes to his basement
vault to revel in possessing the spectacular haul from the never-solved Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum heist of 1990. That person is pretty twisted. But the
unrecovered Nazi loot is far, far worse, in part because of its scale. There
are hundreds or even thousands of people out there holding on to it. They eat
off silver and crystal in dining rooms graced with paintings that were bought
and paid for with the blood of millions of genocide victims. That’s beyond simple
theft; that’s absolute perversion of the soul.

Let me know if you’re interested in
painting with me in Maine in 2014 or Rochester at any time. Click here for
more information on my Maine workshops!